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Working with C1Report / Working with VBScript / VBScript Elements, Objects, and Variables
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    VBScript Elements, Objects, and Variables
    In This Topic

    The following tables detail VBScript elements, objects, and variables.

    Operators

    The following table contains the VBScript operators:

    Operator Description
    And Performs a logical conjunction on two expressions.
    Or Performs a logical disjunction on two expressions.
    Not Performs a logical disjunction on two expressions.
    Mod Divides two numbers and returns only the remainder.

    Reserved symbols

    The following table contains the VBScript reserved symbols and how to use them:

    Keyword Description
    True The True keyword has a value equal to -1.
    False The False keyword has a value equal to 0.
    Nothing Used to disassociate an object variable from any actual object. To assign Nothing to an object variable, use the Set statement, for example: Set MyObject = Nothing Several object variables can refer to the same actual object. When Nothing is assigned to an object variable, that variable no longer refers to any actual object. When several object variables refer to the same object, memory and system resources associated with the object to which the variables refer are released only after all of them have been set to Nothing, either explicitly using Set, or implicitly after the last object variable set to Nothing.
    Null The Null keyword is used to indicate that a variable contains no valid data.
    vbCr When you call print and display functions, you can use the following constants in your code in place of the actual values.
    vbCrLf When you call print and display functions, you can use the following constants in your code in place of the actual values.
    vbLf When you call print and display functions, you can use the following constants in your code in place of the actual values.
    vbFormFeed When you call print and display functions, you can use the following constants in your code in place of the actual values.
    vbNewLine When you call print and display functions, you can use the following constants in your code in place of the actual values.
    vbNullChar When you call print and display functions, you can use the following constants in your code in place of the actual values.
    vbTab When you call print and display functions, you can use the following constants in your code in place of the actual values.
    vbVerticalTab When you call print and display functions, you can use the following constants in your code in place of the actual values.
    vbBlack Black. Value = 0x0.
    vbRed Red. Value = 0xFF.
    vbGreen Green. Value = 0xFF00.
    vbYellow Yellow. Value = 0xFFFF.
    vbBlue Blue. Value = 0xFF0000.
    vbMagenta Magenta. Value = 0xFF00FF.
    vbCyan Cyan. Value = 0xFFFF00.
    vbWhite White. Value = 0xFFFFFF.

    Built-in functions

    The VBScript built-in functions are listed below:

    Abs Date Iif Minute Sign
    Acos DateAdd InputBox Month Space
    Asc DateDiff InStr MonthName Sqr
    Asin DatePart InStrRev MsgBox StrComp
    Atn DateSerial Int Now String
    CBool DateValue IsDate Oct Tan
    CByte Day IsEmpty Pi Time
    CCur Exp IsNull Replace Timer
    CDate Fix IsNumeric RGB TimeSerial
    CDbl Format IsObject Right TimeValue
    Chr FormatCurrency LCase Rnd Trim
    CInt FormatDateTime Left Round TypeName
    CLng FormatNumber Len RTrim UCase
    Cos FormatPercent Log Second WeekDay
    CSng Hex LTrim Sgn WeekDayName
    CStr Hour Mid Sin Year

    For more information on the VBScript functions, see the MSDN documentation.

    The key features of VBScript that are part of C1Report are as follows:

    Built-in script functions, Like and In have functionality similar to SQL operators LIKE and IN and return True or False.
    Like(str, template): Compares 'str' to 'template', which can contain wildcard '%'. Some examples of Like function are as follows:

    In(obj, obj1, ... objN): Tests whether 'obj' is among objects 'obj1', ... , 'objN'. Some examples of In function are as follows:

    As you can observe, both the functions are case-sensitive, so "abc" is not the same as "Abc".

    Note that the following VBScript features are not supported in C1Report:

    Statement keywords

    The VBScript statement keywords are listed below:

    If ElseIf To While Dim
    Then EndIf Next Wend Redim
    Else For Step Const

    Report Field Names

    Names of Field objects are evaluated and return a reference to the object, so you can access the field's properties. The default property for the Field object is Value, so by itself the field name returns the field's current value. For example:

    MyField.BackColor = RGB(200,250,100)
    MyField.Font.Size = 14
    MyField * 2 ' (same as MyField.Value * 2)
    Note: If you give a report field the same name as a database field, you won't be able to access the report field.

    Report Section Names

    Names of Section objects are evaluated and return a reference to the object, so you can access the section's properties. The default property for the Section object is Name. For example:
    If Page = 1 Then [Page Footer].Visible = False

    Database Field Names

    Names of fields in the report's dataset source are evaluated and return the current field value. If a field name contains spaces or periods, it must be enclosed in square brackets. For example:

    OrderID
    UnitsInStock
    [Customer.FirstName]
    [Name With Spaces]

    Report Variables

    Page

    The page variable returns or sets the value of the Page property. This property is initialized by the control when it starts rendering a report, and is incremented at each page break. You may reset it using code. For example:

    If Country <> LastCountry Then Page = 1
    LastCountry = Country

    Pages

    The pages variable returns a token that gets replaced with the total page count when the report finishes rendering. This is a read-only property that is typically used in page header or footer fields. For example:
    "Page " & Page & " of " & Pages

    Report Object

    The report object returns a reference to the control object, so you can access the full C1Report object model from your scripts and expressions. For example:

    "Fields: " & Report.Fields.Count

    Cancel

    Set Cancel to True to cancel the report rendering process. For example:

    If Page > 100 Then Cancel = True